time of use rates lessons learned after one year

21
Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Upload: dwight-black

Post on 23-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Time of Use Rates

Lessons Learned After One Year

Page 2: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Time of Use - Outline

Introduction/History Intended Goal Key Findings & Observations Time of Use Rate Design Guidelines Rate Design Implementation Approach Initial Results Initial Feedback Adjustments One-year Observations Path Forward Phone Survey Data Customer Data

Page 3: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

For a market to correctly function, there must be elasticity in the demand curve.

With fixed rates customers have no incentive to modify their use of electricity as the price changes on the wholesale market.

Aligning the retail price of electricity to the wholesale cost gives those with the ability to shift their electric use an incentive to use electricity when the wholesale price is lowest.

If Time of Use Rates are set up correctly, it is hoped that the customer could lower their rates and the utility would lower their generation, transmission and capacity costs.

Introduction/History

Page 4: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

About Groton, MA

Groton, Massachusetts - founded in 1655, has a population of 10,636 (2009 Town Census) and is located in the Nashoba Valley area in northwestern Middlesex County. Groton has an area of 32.54 square miles. There are 106 miles of plowed or maintained roads within the town. Town Hall is 320 feet above sea level and the highest elevation is Chestnut Hill Road at 516 feet above sea level. The median household income is $82,869.

Page 5: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Intended Goal

Groton Electric’s goal with Time Of Use Rates is to create a simple structure where customers will be motivated to shift a portion of their electric use from the high cost peak hours to the lower cost off peak hours saving themselves money and reducing the generation, transmission, and capacity costs of Groton Electric.

               

PEAK USE        

11:00 am - 7:00 pm                         

               

               

            OFF-PEAK USE            11:00 pm - 7:00 am             

The more customers can shift their electric use from peak to off-peak hours, the lower their average cost per kilowatt-hour

Page 6: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Key Findings and Observations

The most encouraging finding after one year is that while the customers voluntarily using the Time of Use rates shifted their use 2.74% from the peak hours to the off peak hours, they reduced their contribution to Groton Electric’s monthly peak hour (which determines transmission costs) by 17%.

Page 7: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Time Of Use Rate Design Guidelines

At the end of 2008, Groton Electric completed a 900 MHz two-way communication meter system for residential customers. Since we only have hourly usage data for residential meters, the initial Time Of Use program is only being offered to residential customers.

When creating the rates, we had three primary guidelines:

Make the Rates Revenue NeutralKeep the Program Simple Align retail price to wholesale price

Page 8: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

After looking at rate design guidelines, Groton Electric created a 7-11 rate structure by dividing the day into four segments. The rates were adjusted

and placed into three categories to achieve our goals.

11:00 pm – 7:00 am Low (Off-Peak) Rate

7:00 am – 11:00 am Middle (Mid-Peak) Rate

11:00 am – 7:00 pm High (Peak) Rate

7:00 pm – 11:00 pm Middle (Mid-Peak) Rate

After analyzing wholesale market price variation for 2008, Groton Electric designed the three rates with a slight benefit given to the lower rate.

An additional concern was factored in because of how we pass our NYPA preference power credit to our customers. This concern was addressed by creating two time-of-use rates - one for customers who use less than 1000 kWh/month and one for customers who use greater than 1000 kWh/month.

Rate Design

Page 9: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Residential TOU < 1000 kWh/month

Off-peak T1 $ 0.08549

Mid-peak T1 $ 0.11279

Peak T1 $ 0.13559

Residential TOU >1000 kWh/month

Off-peak T2 $ 0.08899

Mid-peak T2 $ 0.11779

Peak T2 $ 0.14179

As of May 2010, the rates are expected to remain constant for the near future.

Time Of Use Rates Effective January 1, 2009

Page 10: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Implementation Approach

After receiving Board approval of the rates, the next challenge was the ability to incorporate the new rate structure into our billing program and to present it in an understandable format on the bill.

This was designed, developed and demonstrated during the December 2008 billing

cycle.

We then recruited Time of Use customers in our

January 2009 Newsletter.

After one year of analysis, the time of use rates were demonstrated to have the effect of shifting use. A second push for customers to voluntarily join the program was presented in the April 2010 Newsletter.

Page 11: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Initial Results

Percentage of customers signing upWithin a relatively short period of time we had one percent of our customers enrolled in the program.

Customer MixAt the one year mark, 79% of the time of use customers were in the rate class for residential customers who use less than 1000 kWh per month.

Groton has a significant number of large homes that use a higher-than-average amount of electricity, but at this time the large residential customers have not shown much interest in this program.

Average usageAfter one year, the profile of the average customer using time of use rates is very close to the average residential customer in Groton.

Groton average residential customer uses 859 kWh/month

Groton average time of use customer uses 836 kWh/month

The average Time of Use customer shifted 2.74% of their use from the higher cost peak rate period to the lower cost off-peak rate period in 2010.

Page 12: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Initial Feedback

Enthusiasm25% of the customers in the program were very conscious about their use and successfully shifted between 4.3% and 9.8% of their use from peak hours to off peak hours.

DisappointmentOne lesson learned was that customers who have considerable air conditioning use will probably see their total bill increase under the Time of Use rate. Initial screening should discourage customers with significant air conditioning from signing up for the program, or at least explain to them what may happen to their bills during the summer months. In the first year of the program this group of customers was not happy as soon as the warm weather hit. By the end of the summer many of them had dropped out of the program.

Page 13: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Feedback

Cost / Benefit analysis

One customer who was very successful at shifting electric use and reducing the cost of electricity during 2009, decided to withdraw from the program in March of 2010 because shifting their electric use was too stressful and they wanted to enjoy the summer.

Page 14: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Weekends

Initially implemented the Time of Use rate schedule Sunday – Monday to ensure the lowest rate possible during the 11:00 pm – 7:00 am off-peak time slot

Results and customer feedback encouraged Groton Electric to consider lowering the weekend peak rate to the mid-peak rate so customers could do their household chores during weekend days

After seeing that shifting use was actually lowering Groton Electric’s costs, the Board approved reducing the weekend peak rate to the mid-peak rate.

Adjustments

Page 15: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Time of Use Rates

                                    

                                 

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

                                   

          TIME-OF-USE PERIODS OF THE DAY          

                                   

                         

          OFF-PEAK   MID-PEAK   PEAK          

Page 16: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

One-year Observations

After one year, we have observed that it is difficult for the average residential customer to shift a large portion of their use. We have a small number of customers who have put timers on their hot water heaters and are passionate about only running their appliances from 11:00 pm to 7:00 am.

The clear winners in the time of use rate class are customers who have pool pumps AND who also do not use a significant amount of air conditioning.

We have seen that a small shift in use (2.7%) has translated into a significant reduction in those customer’s contribution to Groton Electric’s peak hours (17%).

Page 17: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

One-year Observations

The savings we realized in reduced capacity and transmission costs were able to be returned to the customers in this class by the reduction in weekend peak energy costs.

We will continue to monitor this program and hopefully this summer we will have a significant heat wave, to test our results under real peak conditions.

Usage changes

As a class, the total shift for all customers in the time of use rate category was 2.4%. When their use change was weighted by their average load, the time-of-use customers as a whole successfully shifted their use 2.7%. This indicates that customers with larger loads were able to shift a larger percent of their use than customers with smaller loads.

Page 18: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Path Forward

Groton Electric has started deploying commercial smart meters capable of time of use billing and plan to have all commercial customers deployed by the end of 2010. This will enable Groton Electric to analyze hourly load data to determine a rate structure that will be revenue neutral for a voluntary commercial time of use rate class.

Page 19: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

Phone survey data

One customer shifted their use 9.8% They accomplished the shift by having a

general awareness and changing their habits.

They consciously avoided doing certain things

between 11:00 am and 7:00 pm; they also put their pool pump on a timer.

One customer stopped using the clothes dryer At least one customer put a timer on the hot water heater Many customers mentioned they put effort into running appliances

off-peak Most of the customers who had significant shifting used a pool pump

timer

Page 20: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

DATA

As shown below, this time of use customer who entered the voluntary rate on January 1, 2009 was successful at shifting their electric use. In addition to increasing their off-peak use from 23% to 32%, they decreased their electricity use during the peak period from almost 38% to under 32%.

TOU customer #37 2009 kWh   2008 kWh

Total 1-1 to 12-31 13,138.5 96.9% 13,557.8

       

Total 11pm - 7am 4,250.4   3,173.7

percent of Off-Peak use 32.4%   23.4%

       

Total 11am - 7pm 4,130.5   5,109.1

percent of Peak use 31.4%   37.7%

Page 21: Time of Use Rates Lessons Learned After One Year

DATA

A spreadsheet with the hourly usage data for all customers in our time of use rate classes is available with identifying information eliminated.

If you would like this file, please contact Tammi Lemire at [email protected]

The file can be opened by Excel 2007 or Open Office and is currently 11.2 Mb so it may not make it through many email systems. If your email can not handle a file of that size, please include ftp information or mail a usb drive to:

Groton Electric Light

Tammi Lemire

23 Station Avenue

Groton, MA 01450